Visual angle
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The visual angle is the angle that a visual stimulus subtends at the eye. Simply speaking, it is the angle between the light rays from the two ends of the viewed object as they hit the eye. It is usually measured in degrees or minutes of arc.
If one looks at a one-centimeter object at a distance of one meter and a two-centimeter object at a distance of two meters, both have the same size on the retina. Therefore, in many cases it does not make sense to refer to the absolute size of a visual stimulus, if one is interested in the performance of the eye or the first processing steps in the visual cortex. What matters is the visual angle.
The visual angle in degrees (for radians remove 180/pi) can be computed with the formula:
- arc=2*atan2(width/2,distance)*180/pi
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- Calculation of the visual angle
- The University at Buffalo's Interactive Visual Acuity Chart for the display of letters or symbols for a specified Snellen line on your computer monitor at exactly the right size (note: you must follow the instructions for calibration).